Saturday March 20, 2010 3:19 PM ET
SmartMoney
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Consumer Action by Aleksandra Todorova and Nicole Ridgway

Worksheet: Should You Trade in Your Gas Guzzler?


WATCHING HELPLESSLY AS the price at the gas pump ticks into the triple digits is enough to make any SUV owner want to ditch their fuel-hungry behemoth for something a lot less wasteful. But before putting the "For Sale" sign in the windshield consider this: You could actually lose money by trading in your gas guzzler for a more fuel-efficient car.

"While it may be tempting to trade in your big SUV after spending $100 to fill its gas tank, it is important you take everything into consideration before you decide to change vehicles or you may end up spending thousands of dollars to save hundreds," says Jack Nerad, the executive market analyst for Kelley Blue Book, a provider of used and new vehicle information.

At first glance, a 2008 Ford (F) Escape Hybrid, which averages 32 miles a gallon, looks much more attractive than the 2006 Toyota 4Runner, which gets 17. Some quick math reveals that driving the Escape 1,000 miles at a current $4 a gallon would cost you just $125 in gas; the 4Runner, on the other hand, would need $235 worth — a $110 difference. Sure, it's significant gas savings, but a few things are missing from the equation.

"It seems people are very focused on the immediate pain at the pump, but it's important to think about how much it's going to cost you all year and, if you make the change, how much will it save you," explains Jeff Bartlett, the online deputy editor of autos for Consumer Reports.

To determine whether trading in your SUV for a more fuel-efficient car makes sense use our calculator, which takes into consideration such things as your driving habits, the trade-in value of your existing car and how much you still owe on it. Needless to say, many other factors come into play, including how long you've owned your car and additional ownership costs like insurance and sales tax. Here's what SUV owners need to consider before they unload their gas guzzlers.

As a rule of thumb, selling your car within the first three years of buying it is a mistake. "[In the first three years] depreciation is greatest, you've just paid tax, insurance is high, most people are still making payments on a loan... you don't have much equity in your car because you're paying more interest in those months," says Consumer Reports' Bartlett.

Sell your car when it's only two or three years old and you'll get just 50% to 60% of the original price, says Karl Brauer, editor-in-chief of Edmunds.com, an auto information web site. Hold off for another couple of years, however, and it will sell for 40% to 50% of its original price. "You'd get twice the use out of it and its only dropping that value a little bit more."

Don't rely on your SUV's resale value to help offset the cost of a new car — it won't be worth anywhere near the amount you'd typically expect.

In a May report entitled "Don't Sell Your SUV," Kelley Blue Book said that the value of the average SUV has depreciated by as much as $5,000 dollars, or roughly 8%, over the past six months. Ordinarily, that type of depreciation occurs over a 12- to 18-month period, says Nerad. Essentially, SUVs are losing value at more than double the regular rate, mainly because of skyrocketing gasoline prices.

As values plunge, many SUV owners are discovering that they owe far more for their car than it's actually worth. In these cases, the loans are considered "underwater" or "upside down."

"If you're trying to get rid of a car that you can only get $13,000 for and you still owe $20,000 on it, you have a $7,000 deficit before you even buy a new vehicle," explains Brauer.

Car owners in this situation often refinance their existing loans into the new ones. Their monthly payments not only include what they're paying for the new car, but what they still owe on the old car as well — plus interest, says Nerad. (This is the assumption in our calculator).

Thanks to the credit crunch, many upside-down borrowers won't qualify for a new car loan at all. "The banks have tightened up, [they are] not willing to loan the money to get people to buy all of these cars," says Marvin Hedrick, director of finance at a Chrysler dealership in Spring Hill, Fla. "Negative equity complicates it much, much more."

SUV owners who are looking to sell will need plenty of patience. A survey by CNW Marketing Research found that, in April, the average SUV took more than 66 days to sell and, when it did, it sold for 20% less than its Kelley Blue Book value.

Some dealerships aren't even taking SUVs and trucks right now, says Brauer. "It's an extreme example, but that's certainly the mindset. [SUVs] are public enemy No. 1," he says.

There is a silver lining for those willing to wait. Kelley's Nerad predicts that prices for SUVs will bottom out soon, and demand will pick up as drivers face the oncoming winter. In the meantime, Lisa Featherngill, the director of financial and estate planning for Winston-Salem, N.C.-based wealth management firm Calibre, suggests that SUV owners hang onto their gas guzzler and buy an inexpensive fuel-efficient car they can use for their daily commute. Then, when it comes time to go to Costco or take the family on a road trip, they can fire up the SUV.

Don't forget to consider all the extra charges that come along with buying a new car. Sales tax, for example, can run as high as 5% in some states, says Featherngill. Buy a $20,000 car and the sales tax could easily cost you another $1,000.

You'll also have to register the car with the DMV — for a fee. And depending on the car, you might have to pay more for insurance, too.

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User Comments
Posted by: vaughan_brandon
Don't get me wrong, I hate the idea of paying $4 per gallon for gasoline at the pump, but the fact that it has taken gas prices to get this crazy to cause Americans to wake up and acknowledge the issue is remarkable. It is only now that people are not buying these ridiculous SUVs and companies are starting to concentrate on alternative energy sources. Are Americans that naive to think that their continued gas consumption would not come with consequences? It is funny to me that car companies are scrambling to retool their factories to make smaller more efficient cars only after the demand for the huge SUVs have collapsed. It is also ironic that papers are reporting the end of suburban sprawl may be on the horizon due to increased fuel cost. What I fear is that gas prices come down to a level where Americans feel content and safe and begin the entire process and continue their wasteful ways once again. This is not a phase that we are going through people, this is the way of the fu...(Read more of this comment)
Posted by: DavidnAustinTX
Seriously, this whole 'Global Warming', 'the sky is falling', 'we are running out of..X,Y,&Z' is really just another fanatical religion. If you don't 'feel' the way the GW crowd does then your gonna die and cause the world to die. Geeezzz sound familiar?

Global Warming no more exists than the freakin Easter Bunny. So I'm going to keep driving my big truck, using my grill, drinking tap water, flying in planes and what ever else I want to do because I am a FREE AMERICAN!

This reminds me of the 70's when D-Prez Carter was in office and Gas hit over a $1.00 and we had a 'Misery Index' of course these little GW minions have no idea what that is because they think Jimmy Carter is some sort of saint. Those of that lived through it know he is a sweater wearing wimp with the mind of a mentally retarded ape.

Our problem then was refining capacity and oil availability. That was relieved when Reagan came to office.

Increase our local oil supply and inc...(Read more of this comment)
Posted by: elipicayo
Is it me, or has the world gone crazy? The solution to the energy crisis is not to buy another car and thus compound the problem. The solution is to change our cars, those that we own right now, so that they can use alternative fuels. Many years ago there were tons of books on how to adapt a gasoline engine to run on alcohol. Ford MC builds what they call FlexFuels Vehicles or FFVs and they sell them all over the world. Brazil buys a lot of them. What is the difference between a FFV and a regular car? I can tell you that it's very small. Maybe some adjustment in the FI or carburetor and you're running on ethanol.

Why do people listen to the BS spewed by the News Networks? I guess no one knows. I can tell you that there are only 5 networks in the US and they own all the radio, tv, newspapers and magazines out there. The biggest one is General Electric. Yep, you read right. So, these networks work to keep us stupid, or at least ignorant. They only talk about buying more cars or...(Read more of this comment)
Posted by: BigBucksAuto
Before the days that SUV's took over the road, we had a thing called the gas crisis of the 1970's. It was at that time that smaller cars and things like gas mileage became important. This was also the time way before standard safety features such as required seat belt laws, child car seats, and airbags, and incredibly enough, it worked!

Then people got all comfortable again and the ideal of going 'off road' (as opposed to really using an SUV to go offroad) became trendy, and practically every car got bigger and they ate more and more gas.

I do not believe that people bought into the SUV hype becasue they all go up icy roads or want to go off roading to kyack. Nor do I believe that half of them did do becasue of safety reasons. People bought SUV's becasue they wanted to, becasue their cousin's neighbor had one and it was cool.
My neighbor bought one and was uber excited becasue it had an built in DVD player. They have no children. We mocked them because who was a...(Read more of this comment)
Posted by: lonesomewolf
There are other costs that should be considered. You can and should drop collision and comprehensive insurance on an old vehicle. That saves a lot of money on insurance vs. a new vehicle which has much higher insurance costs. For example it save me $50-60 a month. In some states like Georgia, you are charged a yearly Georgia ad valorem tax which is calculated based on the value of the vehicle. For example, I pay $60 a year ($5 a month) vs. the $600 a year (or $50 a month) my spouse pays on her newer vehicle. Other costs include high performance tires which are coming with a lot of new - even fuel efficient - vehicles. These tires have a much shorter life span and I am finding people at working complaining how much tires cost and how frequently they are being replaced. You also can stretch out the oil change much longer than Jiffy lube says. Read your manual. My manual states that I need to do a change ever 8k miles. At $35 an oil change that adds up.


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